By César Chelala
November 16, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - On March 11, 1999,
President Bill Clinton took an unprecedented step.
During a four-nation visit to Central America, he
expressed regret for the role the United States had
played in a brutal counter-terrorism campaign that
had caused the deaths of thousands of civilians in
Guatemala’s civil war.
President Clinton’s apology followed the
publication of the findings of an Independent
Historical Clarification commission, which concluded
that U.S. government support to the Guatemalan
military was responsible for most of the human
rights abuses committed during the 36-year war in
which 200,000 people died.
The human rights abuses were also detailed in The
Guatemala Truth Commission report which was
coordinated by Guatemalan Bishop Juan Gerardi, who
was brutally murdered. According to the report,
children were killed, abducted, forcibly recruited
as soldiers and sexually abused. Fetuses were cut
from their mothers’ wombs and young children were
thrown alive into pits.
Brutal as it was, this was not the first time
that the US government had intervened in Guatemalan
affairs. In 1954, the US Central Intelligence Agency
(CIA) carried out a covert operation that deposed
the democratically elected Guatemalan President
Jacobo Arbenz. The coup that installed Carlos
Castillo Armas was the first in a series of
U.S.-backed authoritarian regimes in Guatemala and
was preceded by US efforts to isolate Guatemala
internationally. Arbenz had instituted
near-universal suffrage, introduced a minimum wage,
and turned Guatemala into a democracy.
Castillo Armas quickly assumed dictatorial
powers, banned opposition parties, imprisoned and
tortured political opponents, and reversed the
social reforms of the Arbenz government. The coup
was universally condemned and gave rise to strong
anti-U.S. sentiment throughout the Americas.
Nearly four decades of civil war followed, with
leftist guerrillas fighting a series of U.S.-backed
authoritarian regimes. The consequence was the
genocide of the country’s Mayan population, when
more than 200,000 indigenous people were murdered by
Guatemalan military regimes supported by the US
As in Guatemala, the US also supported the
government in the war in El Salvador against the
leftist guerrillas (FMLN), providing military aid in
the amount of between one and two million dollars
per day. US officers took over key positions at the
top levels of the Salvadoran military and made
critical decisions in conducting the civil war. The
war lasted over 12 years (1979-1992) and resulted in
more than 75,000 people murdered or “disappeared.”
According to the United Nations, while 5 percent
of the murders of civilians were committed by the
FMLN, 85 percent were carried out by the Salvadoran
armed forces and the paramilitary death squads. The
squads mutilated the bodies of their victims as a
way of terrifying the population. The so-called
Atlacatl Battalion, which savagely murdered and
mutilated six Jesuit priests, was reportedly under
the tutelage of US Special Forces just 48 hours
before the killings.
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Honduras has had historically strong
military ties with the US In 2009,
Manuel Zelaya, a liberal reformist, was
ousted in a military coup. The US
refused to call it a coup while working
to ensure that Zelaya did not return to
power, in flagrant contradiction to the
wishes of the Organization of American
States. Today, the country is in
disarray: violent gangs are everywhere,
while government spending on health and
education has declined.
These observations are very much related to
today’s events. It has been estimated that almost 70
percent of the children who crossed the U.S.-Mexican
border in 2014 came from what is called the Central
American northern triangle, formed by Guatemala, El
Salvador and Honduras. Those three countries have
suffered from US intervention in their social and
political affairs.
In the last century, the US military intervention
leading to the overthrow of democratically elected
governments – or its support for tyrannical regimes
– has played an important role in the instability,
poverty, and violence that drives tens of thousands
of people from the Central American countries toward
Mexico and the United States. To these factors, one
should add the destabilizing effect of natural
disasters and a general climate of insecurity and
violence in these countries.
Actions have consequences and interfering in
other countries’ affairs can have long-lasting
effects. This is especially true when one considers
what happened in Central America. It would be naïve
to blame the US for all the ills in much of the
region. But it would be equally naïve to ignore how
US intervention in Central America has helped create
the situation that plagues the region today.
Dr. César Chelala is an international public
health consultant and a winner of several journalism
awards.
The original source of this article is
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